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By admin , 21 December 2015

Karl Alexander Müller

By admin , 21 December 2015

Dines Bjørner

By admin , 21 December 2015

Miklós Ajtai

By aweissberger , 22 March 2016

Andy Grove, ex-Intel CEO & Silicon Valley icon, dies at 79

There are several excerpted articles and quotes from those that worked for or with Andy Grove at Intel: San Jose Mercury article by Steve Johnson (edited for clarity and conciseness by Alan J Weissberger):

By ceruzzi , 4 April 2008

"Cybernetics is the Universal Solvent of Technology"

Those words were spoken by the late Professor W. David Lewis, of Auburn University, discussing a talk I had given about the relationship of computing to aerospace. We all know the corollary: if you discover a universal solvent, in what container can you hold itFor myself, working at the National Air and Space Museum, this paradox came home forcefully when Ronald D.
By ceruzzi , 19 March 2012

The Sweet Spot

PC World recently ran an interesting piece about vintage DP equipment still being used on a daily basis, for practical purposes. They even found someone using punched card accounting equipment.

By fwithington , 14 November 2015

Amdahl Recollection

gene-amdahlOn 11/13/2015 the NY Times printed the obituary of Eugene Amdahl, which prompted this recollection of him. His revolutionary attack on IBM with plug-compatible high-end computers  occurred at the time I was most involved in industry forecasting for AD Little.

By ceruzzi , 16 April 2008

What we don't know

An obituary in a recent Washington Post brought back a flood of memories for me, and reminded me of a topic I had been meaning to discuss but had put aside. Samuel S.

By ceruzzi , 25 February 2008

Introduction

ceruzzi.jpgAt first I assumed that everyone out there knows who I am, but perhaps I had better introduce myself. I am Paul Ceruzzi, Curator of Aerospace Computing and Electronics at the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum, in Washington, D.C.
By ceruzzi , 26 March 2008

Moore's Law, Steve Case, and YouTube

gordon-moore.jpgMoore’s Law is an empirical observation—that the density of computer memory chips doubles about every 18 months, and it has been doing so for the past four decades. Magnetic storage capacity, and to a less-regular extent, processor speeds and telecommunications bandwidth have also been increasing exponentially in a complementary fashion.
By mols , 28 November 2008

Bell Telephone Antwerp's American Ways

logo_fnrs1While in the just-over hectic fortnight spent at pre-preparing for a project proposal with the FNRS, the Belgian funding agency for scientific research, I got the sad news that Nicolas Rouche, one of the Belgian pioneers who had helped our research on the Machine Mathématique IRSIA-FNRS had died une

By mbaylor , 31 March 2011

Remembering Paul Baran

Paul BaranThere are many measures of success; wealth, power and fame are the most common.

By ceruzzi , 7 June 2010

Simplicity Revisited

A while ago I mentioned a book I was reading called The Laws of Simplicity, by John Maeda. Forgive me if I return to this topic, but it seems too important to ignore. With all the fuss about the products coming from Apple, and the Amazon Kindle, it is time to revisit the topic. I have resisted getting any of these devices, because they do not satisfy what  are very reasonable standards of "simple" design, which we  have a right to demand from those who would supply us with electronic gadgets.

By jwest , 16 June 2011

Happy birthday, Computing Tabulating Recording Corporation

Today marks the 100th anniversary of the 1911 formation of the Computing Tabulating Recording Corporation through the merger of the International Time Recording Company, the Computing Scale Company and the Tabulating Machine Company.

By aweissberger , 9 October 2012

Exciting New Happenings at Computer History Museum: Blog, Social Media, Digital Repository, Exhibits & Events!

1.  The venerable Computer History Museum (CHM) in Mt View, CA recently launched a multimedia blog, with contributors from their seasoned staff of curators and subject matter experts.  

CHM Prez John Hollar told me,  "This has been one of the most important initiatives CHM has taken in the area of digital content and distribution.  It is and will continue to be a window into the museum's work by publishing different types of content on a variety of interesting topics."

@CHM is the blog name.  Check it our here:  http://www.computerhistory.org/atchm/

By ceruzzi , 28 September 2011

Another Historic Plaque

By now you must know that I am fond of historic plaques, especially ones that have to do with the District of Columbia or Northern Virginia. Here's another one, from Arlington:ArpanetThe full text reads:

By ceruzzi , 2 December 2009

The Latest from the Large Hadron Collider

As of this morning, the LHC is shut down again. By now you've probably heard the reason being floated: the LHC is so powerful it reaches into the future. There, some entity recognizes that generating such energies by Earthlings is dangerous, given our level of expertise. So he or she or it travels back in time periodically to shut the machine down.

By aweissberger , 21 October 2012

Microsoft's Chief Research Officer Rick Rashid in Conversation with NYT's John Markoff @CHM

On October 16th, Rick Rashid, Microsoft Research's first employee and now its Chief Research Officer, engaged in a spirited conversation with NY Times science & technology journalist John Markoff at the Computer History (CHM) museum in Mt View, CA.  The discussion was part of the museum’s “Revolutionaries” series, which is not to be confused with the "Revolutions exhibit."  The  former is a luminary lecture series sponsored by Intel.  The latter is the museum's marque exhibit, which cost millions of dollars to develop and several years to put together.  

By mols , 8 September 2008

Towards Geek Polities?

31-schtroumpf-geek1The other day, after being asked to contribute as a tutor for freshers, I had a nosey sneak through the faculty freshers' handbook.

By jwest , 24 February 2011

Ken Olsen and his once-great company

Ken Olsen, co-founder of Digital Equipment Corporation, died Feb. 6. While most millennials would say “who?” those with a little more perspective will remember him as one of the most significant business leaders and entrepreneurs of 20th century computer history.

By mols , 23 February 2009

From Berkeley's 'Giant Brains' to Chess Playing Computers...

machines_that_thinkA couple of weeks ago, Evan Koblentz, president of MARCH, non-profit user group for vintage computer collectors, asked the SIGCIS members' opinion as regards to E.C. Berkeley's paternity of the expression 'Giant Brains'.

By mols , 10 July 2008

Introduction: Hazards of life…

Maybe this post ought have come first before my comment on the Three Societies Meeting just up the blog. Still as it was more about me I have preferred leaving it out as second. I hope not being murdered for that.

By ceruzzi , 2 January 2009

New Year Thoughts

zuneBy now you've all heard about the Microsoft Zune bug that was caused by its software having difficulty dealing with a leap year. On at least one other post I talked about the problems the Gregorian calendar gives computer programmers (actually it was Church officials, which is sort of the same thing).

By ceruzzi , 23 July 2008

Music

All three of my kids have I-Pods. One of them has a model that holds 10,000 songs. If each song were, on average, about three minutes long, it would two months to get through them all, if you listened to the gadget for 8 hours a day. What’s the point?

 

By ceruzzi , 29 April 2009

Geocities

geocities-logo1By now you have probably heard that Yahoo! is shutting down its Geocities site. There has been a lot of coverage in the press about this, usually relating to two themes. The first is that it illustrates the worst of the dot.com bubble, as Yahoo!

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